The New York Times: Why transfer release clauses are more common, more complex and more specific than ever
You should have had a release clause, Alexander! Imagine the strife and anger that could have been avoided had Isak’s agent insisted on inserting a figure of, say, £120million into the six-year ...
Why transfer release clauses are more common, more complex and more specific than ever
Business Wire: Rhino Releases Data Profile of Deposit Insurance Product in 1 Million Homes Nationwide
Rhino Releases Data Profile of Deposit Insurance Product in 1 Million Homes Nationwide
Last week, the 2021 Annual Profile of Solicitors in NSW was released, revealing a growing legal profession that’s increasingly made up of people from culturally diverse backgrounds, as well as a ...
A clause is a group of words that includes a subject and a verb. Every clause functions as one part of speech. An independent clause can stand alone as sentence, but an dependent clause cannot. There are three types of dependent clause: a relative clause, an adverbial clause, and a noun clause.
When we talk about sentences in English, clauses are at the heart of it all. A clause is simply a group of words that has a subject and a verb. Sometimes a clause can stand alone as a complete sentence, and sometimes it needs a little help from another clause. Learning how clauses work makes writing clearer and speaking smoother.
An independent clause can stand alone, i.e. it can constitute a complete sentence by itself. A dependent clause, by contrast, relies on an independent clause's presence to be efficiently utilizable. A second significant distinction concerns the difference between finite and non-finite clauses.